She said that she had always fought for freedom of speech, but at the same time one cannot be "selective" while exercising that freedom.
Her remarks came a day after a case was registered against unknown persons for threatening eminent Bengali poet Mandakranta Sen with gangrape for expressing solidarity with fellow poet Srijato who recently was embroiled in a controversy after writing a poem allegedly hurting "Hindu sentiments".
She said, "I stand beside Srijato for his views... And Mandakranta too. I have been vocal for freedom of speech and that's why I support both of them. But one cannot be selective in asserting one's freedom of speech... Where were they when I was forced out of West Bengal in 2007?"
A Hindutva group had lodged a police complaint against Srijato for posting a 12-line poem on Facebook on March 19, the day Yogi Adityanath was sworn in as the chief minister of UP allegedly hurting "Hindu sentiments".
"They do not write when Muslim fundamentalists or Christian fundamentalists attack and their partiality was manifest by their attitude," the writer of famous novels like "Lajja" lamented.
Referring to the recent killing of Tamil Nadu atheist and Dravidar Viduthalai Kazhagam activist H Farook, Nasreen said, "Where were they when Farooq was killed? I have not seen them spending a single word on that incident. Where were these people when so many persons, bloggers were hacked to death in Bangladesh?"
Nasreen also wondered why Srijato's pen was silent after the Khagragarh blasts, Dhulagarh violence and incidents of gang-rape reported in West Bengal.
"But it's not the same thing with me unlike the pseudo-secular people.. I stand for everybody. I don't see whether someone is a Christian or a Hindu or a Muslim fundamentalist when I speak out," she said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
